The classic example of this divide is how, traditionally, history curriculums approach the Civil War.
While this is less the case today, 25-50 years ago, if you grew up in the South, you would have learned about the "War of Northern Aggression"
If you grew up in the North, you would have learned about the American Civil War and the South's history of slavery and the war to end the slavery.
"Traditional" History is often written by those that were victorious, so it is remarkable to see how in the modern era voices are being heard that would not have been traditionally heard.
A global society means that history is more nuanced with more perspectives present at the table of history.
But there is still a long way to go. Californians will spend lots of time learning about Sutters Fort while Pennsylvanians will learn about Fort Duquesne.
You did not include a timeline, but the American civil war lasted from 1861 to 1865
No one can quite answer your question due to a lack of information on who Thomas is and what the Hartford Convention's demands are.
Well-known as the leader of the American rocket team, which sought the launch astronauts into space, Wernher von Braun<span> initially designed rockets for his native country of Germany during World War II
in small words HE MADE THE FIRST ROCKET BRO</span>
that the burning of the U.S. flag was a constitutionally protected form of speech under the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment.